Archive for May 25, 2013

Hezbollah admits its troops fighting in Syria

May 25, 2013

Hezbollah admits its troops fighting in Syria | The Times of Israel.

Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah says his group’s fighters are battling ‘Islamist extremists’ in Syria that pose a threat to Lebanon

May 25, 2013, 7:58 pm Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. (photo credit: image capture from Channel 2/Al Manar)

Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. (photo credit: image capture from Channel 2/Al Manar)

The leader of Lebanon’s Hezbollah admitted for the first time Saturday that his Shiite terrorist group had deployed fighters to Syria, saying his group would not stand idly by while its chief ally Syria is under attack.

In a televised speech commemorating Resistance and Liberation Day, which marks Israel’s 2000 withdrawal from southern Lebanon, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah said Hezbollah members are fighting in Syria against Islamic extremists who pose a danger to Lebanon.

Nasrallah’s comments Saturday marked the first time he has publically confirmed his men were fighting in the Syrian civil war. They are also his first statement since Hezbollah fighters have become deeply involved in the battle for the strategically critical Syrian town of Qusair.

He said tens of thousands of Islamic extremists from all over the world have been sent to Syria to fight the regime, but Hezbollah sends “a few” fighters and it is accused of intervening in the conflict.

The Shiite leader accused the United States of planning to invade Syria, and of backing takfiris – radical Sunni Islamist groups like Jabhat al-Nusra, which he claimed constituted the majority of the Syrian opposition. At the same time, he attempted to assuage fears that Hezbollah’s intervention in the Syrian civil war against Sunni rebel groups was driven by sectarian motives.

“We are not evaluating the matter from a Sunni or Shiite perspective, but from a perspective joining all Muslims and Christians together because they are all threatened by this takfiri project that is financed by the US,” he said.

Nasrallah warned his followers that the Assad regime’s downfall would have disastrous consequences for the region. “If Syria [falls] in the hands of America, Israel and the takfiris, the future of Lebanon, Syria, Palestine and the whole region would be dark,” Hezbollah’s al-Manar news site quoted Nasrallah saying.

“If Syria falls, the Palestinian cause will be lost,” he said.

Igniting fears of Israel’s military presence in Lebanon, which ceased 13 years ago to the day, Nasrallah also claimed that Israel would invade Lebanon should Syria fall to American and radical Islamist forces.

Nasrallah told his followers that in the divisive civil war in neighboring Syria, “You can be with whoever side you want… but Hezbollah can be neither with the American side nor with the side of murderers who dig [up] grave or rip [open] chests,” referring to a grotesque video in which a Syrian rebel appeared to eat the internal organs of a dead soldier.

Ambassador Thomas Pickering: There is no equal

May 25, 2013

Ambassador Thomas Pickering: There is no equal.

Gregory Hicks testifies before House

Gregory Hicks, foreign service officer and former deputy chief of mission/charge d’affairs in Libya  testified that Thomas Pickering never interviewed him. (Reuters/Yuri Gripas)

Ambassador Thomas R. Pickering personifies the State Department mentality that so many conservatives find objectionable. He authored a Global Zero report arguing for unilateral disarmament and then runs to his co-author Chuck Hagel’s defense, saying it doesn’t say what it plainly does. He gets selected for a critical State Department review of Benghazi, doesn’t interview the secretary or high-level advisers, and writes a report identifying no one in particular. He famously replied that it was fine to leave out higher-ups because “because in fact we knew where the responsibility rested.”

In a milieu where double-talk, evasion and protecting the powerful are rewarded there is no one better.

Now we hear this from the Jerusalem Post’s David Weinberg:

Pickering and his senior “Iran Project” colleagues want President Obama to altogether drop sanctions and covert action against Iran. They assert that sanctions are only “contributing to an increase in repression and corruption within Iran,” and alas “may be sowing the seeds of long-term alienation between the Iranian people and the United States.”

Pickering’s call for U.S. capitulation to Iran is now being echoed across the Washington wag world. Numerous think tanks are seeding the American diplomatic and political discourse with similar messages, and paving the way for a climb-down from Obama’s declared policy of preventing (and not merely containing) Iran’s obtainment of a nuclear weapon.

This week, the Center for a New American Security, a think tank closely affiliated with the Obama administration, made it clear which way the Washington winds are blowing. Its study, “If All Else Fails: The Challenges of Containing a Nuclear-Armed Iran,” was primarily authored by former Obama administration deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East Colin H. Kahl. He outlines “a comprehensive framework to manage and mitigate the consequences of a nuclear-armed Iran.” In other words, stopping the Iranian nuclear effort is already a passé discussion.

Last month, an Atlantic Council task force (which Chuck Hagel co-chaired until he was appointed secretary of defense), similarly released a report that called for Washington to “lessen the chances for war through reinvigorated diplomacy that offers Iran a realistic and face-saving way out of the nuclear standoff.” That’s diplomatic-speak for a containment strategy.

To top it all off, the Defense Department-allied Rand Corporation concluded this week that a nuclear-armed Iran would not pose a fundamental threat to the United States and its regional allies. In “Iran After the Bomb: How Would a Nuclear-Armed Tehran Behave?” Rand’s experts assert that the acquisition by Tehran of nuclear weapons would above all be intended to deter an attack by hostile powers, presumably including Israel and the United States rather than for aggressive purposes. “An Iran with nukes will still be a declining power,” they say. “Iran does not have territorial ambitions and does not seek to invade, conquer, or occupy other nations.”

Is he a stalking horse for the administration and a sign we’re about to see a major flip-flop from deterrence to containment?

Pickering has left the State Department, but as we saw in the Accountability Review Board investigation, he’s a trusted ally of the Foggy Bottom set, knowing just how to handle unpleasantries like the death of four Americans, including an ambassador.

Pickering is being called back to provide further information on his report. While he is there, the lawmakers might want to ask him if he’s simpatico with the administration on Iran, if containment has been the plan (or backup plan) all along, and whether he is also advising the administration on how to capitulate to Iran.

 UPDATE: I am reminded that he also met with Hamas.

Iran’s nuclear designs are the greater Middle East threat – The Washington Post

May 25, 2013

Iran’s nuclear designs are the greater Middle East threat – The Washington Post.

By Michael Oren, Saturday, May 25, 3:41 AM

Michael Oren is Israel’s ambassador to the United States.

The world is, understandably, focused on the Middle East. The map of the region — drawn a century ago by European powers to reflect imperial interests rather than ethnic realities — is unraveling. Syrians and Iraqis are being massacred, and Jordan is flooded with the half-million who have fled. Turkey, a formidable power, also struggles to meet the challenges of refugees and terrorist attacks. Russia, meanwhile, seems bent on supplying Syrian President Bashar al-Assad with deadly weapons such as the S-300 anti-aircraft system. This will enable Assad to enforce a no-fly zone over all of Syria and even parts of neighboring countries.

Given such seismic activity, it is easy to overlook the most explosive development of all. For the Iranian regime, the situation in the Middle East is a convenient distraction. As world leaders deliberate whether and how to intervene in Syria, how to grapple with Iraq, how to shore up Jordan and Turkey, and how to engage the Russians, the Iranian nuclear program advances unchecked.

While the Middle East roils, the Iranians have amassed some 182 kilograms of uranium enriched to a level easily enhanced to weapons grade. This stockpile stops short of the red line drawn by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, but the Iranians are quietly preparing to cross it.

The media is focusing on Middle East atrocities; meanwhile, the Iranians have installed 16,000 centrifuges — an immense number by any standard — most of which are spinning. Iran is introducing 3,000 advanced centrifuges that will at least triple its enrichment rate and more than double its total output. According to an International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report published this week, the Iranians have already installed 689 of these centrifuges, which will shorten the time they will need to reach weapons capacity to several months and maybe even weeks. And we may not be able to see this happening. Iran is also building additional nuclear plants that, like the formerly covert facility at Fordow, will be heavily fortified and possibly beyond the reach of IAEA inspectors. On April 8, Iran celebrated its “national nuclear technology day” by opening a new underground uranium processing site — just two days after participating in talks designed to end the country’s military nuclear program.

Those discussions, conducted with the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany, were also overshadowed by crises in the Middle East. Virtually overlooked was the year-long diplomacy that produced nothing but a hardening of Iran’s position. Although sanctions led by President Obama and Congress continue to cut into Iran’s economy and undermine its currency, the nuclear program progresses. Iranian rulers believe that they are paying a high price but will eventually achieve their nuclear aspirations. They are not yet convinced that the prize will be denied them by military action.

Still, the ayatollahs are taking no chances and trying to protect their nuclear assets. Iran has collaborated with Assad to supply Hezbollah with precision-guided missiles. If successful, the terrorists could target Israeli jets, vital installations and population centers. The goal is to deter Israel from defending itself against an imminent Iranian nuclear threat designed to wipe us off the map.

But Israel will not remain passive. We will prevent these sophisticated missiles from reaching Hezbollah. We will closely monitor the movement of chemical and other game-changing weapons in Syria. Together with the United States, we will develop more advanced anti-ballistic systems. Yet we can never lose sight of the ultimate threat.

If Iran gets the bomb, so too will a number of Middle Eastern states that can pose not only regional chemical but also global nuclear threats. An Iran with military nuclear capabilities will dominate the Persian Gulf and its vast oil deposits, driving oil prices to extortionary highs. And Iran can transfer nuclear weapons to terrorists who can launch them at foreign ports in shipping containers. The entire world will be endangered.

The images emerging from the Middle East, though agonizing, must not camouflage Iran’s nuclear designs. These, we still believe, may yet be thwarted by a combination of escalating sanctions and a credible military threat. Iranian rulers must not only hear about the policy of all options on the table, they must fear it. Iranian nuclear installations may make for bland photographs, especially when compared with the region’s lurid scenes, but they foreshadow a cataclysmic picture.

Off topic: U.S. Police backtrack on motive for killing Jewish triple murder suspect with Boston bomber ties

May 25, 2013

U.S. Police backtrack on motive for killing Jewish triple murder suspect with Boston bomber ties – Israel News | Haaretz Daily Newspaper.

( “Law enforcement officials are now unsure…” ???!!!!!

They were THERE!  This is such a transparent lie that it defies comparison. 

What the FUCK are they covering up now?  Can’t they do a better job at covering up?  Can’t the press actually NOTICE that the government’s shifting position and “unsureness” make no sense whatsoever?  Do they expect anyone with half a brain to believe ANYTHING they say at this point?

This is so “over the top” that I’m starting to feel like a “conspiracy theory” nutcase.  I simply can’t find an explanation that I can believe in to avoid it. – JW )

FBI retracts statement that Ibragim Todashev, shot to death during interview at his Florida home over role in 2011 murder with Tamerlan Tsarnaev, attacked agent with knife.

By | May.25, 2013 | 1:40 PM
An FBI agent at the scene of the house where Ibragim Todashev was shot and killed.

FBI evidence response agent works outside an apartment where a suspected friend of the Boston bombers was shot and killed by FBI on May 22, 2013 in Orlando, Florida. Photo by AFP

Law enforcement officials are now unsure of what spurred the killing of Ibragim Todashev, or if he was ready to confess to his role with deceased Boston bombing suspect Tamerlan Tsarnaev in a 2011 triple murder.

On May 22, Todashev, the mixed-martial-arts fighter, was shot to death while being interviewed by an FBI agent and other law enforcement officials.

According to The Atlantic, two of three officials who spoke anonymously to the Associated Press on Wednesday, are no longer standing by their original statements that Todashev lunged with a knife at an FBI agent who had come to question him in his Orlando-area home about his association with Tsarnaev.

Questions have also risen over reports that Todashev was going to sign a confession stating that he aided Tsarnaev murder two Boston-area Jewish men, Erik Weissman and Rafael Teken, and one of Tsarnaev’s close friends, Brendan Mess. Friends of Todashev told the Orlando Sentinel that he was told by the FBI, who had been in contact with Todashev two days after the Boston bombings, that he was going to be cleared this week.

Todashev’s estranged wife, Reniya Manukyan told the Wall Street Journal that in previous FBI interviews, Todashev never discussed the 2011 murder. “Everything was about the bombing and about him knowing Tamerlan,” said Mankyan, who was also interviewed by the FBI. “They would show me a picture of Tamerlan or Tamerlan’s wife or some other guys that I haven’t a clue who they are, but nothing about a murder—nothing ever.”

An FBI team from Washington, D.C., arrived on Thursday to begin a formal investigation into Todashev’s death.

In Depth: How Iranian weapons go through Syria to Hezbollah

May 25, 2013

In Depth: How Iranian weapons go through Syria to Hezbollah | JPost | Israel News.

By YOSSI MELMAN, SOF HASHAVUA
05/25/2013 15:28
( The war in Syria is good for Israel as its implacable enemies butcher each other and leave us alone.  “To believe this is allowed, to say so is forbidden.”  – JW )
For 20 years, Israeli intelligence has been playing a game of cat and mouse against the weapons smuggling axis of Iran, Syria and Hezbollah in a battle in which “every imaginable method is employed.”

Syrian anti-aircraft missile launchers

Syrian anti-aircraft missile launchers Photo: REUTERS/Sana Sana

In the last few months, electricity and telephone services have been occasionally disrupted without warning in various areas of the Bekaa Valley and other regions near Lebanon’s border with Syria.

The Lebanese Daily Star recently provided the explanantion for the unclear phenomenon.In a report released some two weeks ago on Israel’s efforts to prevent the flow of missiles and advanced weapons from Syria to Lebanon, it was stated that the electricity and telephone service was not being disrupted accidentally, but rather intentionally. Hezbollah is behind the disruptions of service in attempts to make it difficult for Israeli intelligence services to get information on weapons caravans, which begin in Iran, pass through Syria and end in warehouses and underground bunkers in Lebanon.

According to foreign reports, the Israel Air Force has thwarted at least three attempts to transfer surface-to-surface missiles, anti-aircraft missiles and additional weapons systems from Syria to Hezbollah since January. However, when there is sometimes no electrictiy or telephone service,  communications between the intelligence command, operatives and agents repsonsible for getting information on the ground, become more difficult, and electronic intelligence gathering methods(SIGINT) are disrupted.

Hezbollah’s intelligence and information security operatives understand that if the disruption of electricity and telephone networks is too consistent or regular, the enemy – mainly Israeli intelligence, although others also gather intelligence on this subject – can learn the “print,” the pattern in which the networks are taken down. Therefore, they use deception tactics, disrupting networks even when there is no operation to transfer weapons being carried out.

For almost two decades, the Israeli intelligence establishment, led by Military Intelligence and the Mossad, has been playing a game of wits, and cat and mouse with the intelligence establishments of Iran, Syria and Hezbollah. Israel is trying to obtain as much information as possible on the weapons supply
“food chain,” beginning with Iran’s decision to supply weapons, through their transfer to Syria and until their arrvial at the bunkers.

These bunkers, according to foreign reports, are concentrated mainly in Shi’ite villages in the Bekaa Valley and in the Dachia quarter in southern Beirut – the location of Hezbollah’s central command, which has been rebuilt in recent years after having been almost completely destroyed by the IAF during the Second Lebanon War.

“This is a battle in which every imaginable means is employed,” Amos Yadlin, MI chief up until two-and-a-half years ago and current director of the Institute for National Security Studies stated.

From Kalashnikovs to M600s

The two decades of supplying weapons can be divided into three periods. The first began in the 1990s, during the tenure of former Syrian president Hafez Assad, and was charactrized by great caution on the part of the Syrian regime. Damascus allowed Iran to transfer arms to Hezbollah occasionaly, but only
relatively small amounts of light weapons: Kalashnikov rifles, ammunition, mines, mortars and some anti-tank weapons.

“Some of the weapons were supplied in an organized manner,” a former senior intelligence officer who was involved in the issue told Sof Hashavua, “But there were also personal smuggling operations. Syrian Army officers, without the knowledge of their commanders, and certainly unbeknownst to the leadership in Damascus, sold an anti-tank missile and a mortar here and there, and pocketed there profits. The smuggling was carried out in a simple fashion: the weapons were loaded on a truck and hidden under some kind of merchandise, like boxes of vegetables.”

The second period began after Hafez Assad’s death in 2000. His son Bashar gradually began to expand ties with Iran, until they eventually became what they are today: a strategic alliance. As part of this alliance (but also as part of Assad’s own personal initiative) relations between Syria and Hezbollah were
also cultivated. “Ever since he defended his assumption of leadership in the previous decade, Assad has really admired [Hezbollah leader Hassan] Nasrallah and sees him as a leader and role model,” said another
intelligence officer with whom I spoke.

In this period as well, Syria’s behavior was measured and thought out. Most of the weapons being supplied to Hezbollah were Iranian, and the deliveries included Scud surface-to-surface missiles and Fateh-110 precision missiles. These missiles give Hezbollah the ability to hit almost any target of value in Israel, including the Nuclear Research Center in Dimona.

Syrian intelligence officers coordinated the transfers in their territory, under the authority of Assad, and his special consultant and confidant, General Muhammad Suleiman, who also served as the coordinator of Iranian arms transfers to Hezbollah.

Suleiman was killed in 2008 by sniper fire while dining with friends on the balcony of his home in the port city of Tartus. The fire came from a ship anchored not far from the beach, and according to foreign reports, Israel was behind the assassination.

Syria transferred missiles and weapons from their warehouses to Hezbollah only in isolated cases. In one of these instances, old and imprecise Scuds were transferred. In another case, following the attack on the nuclear core in September 2007, attributed to the IAF, Assad decided, as an expression of his
frustration and even revenge, to transfer new, more precise missiles – M600 missiles.

The M600 is the Syrian version of the Iranian Fateh-110 – a guided missile with a range of approximately 200km. The combination of a large, one-ton warhead with relatively high precision and a long range gives Hezbollah abilities that it never had before, such as accurate firing on strategic targets like airports,
emergency warehouses, power plants and more. Israel’s defense systems – neither the Iron Dome nor the Arrow – are capable of coping with this threat. The system which is planned to provide an answer for these missiles is the Magic Wand (also known as David’s Sling), which is still in development.

The third and last stage in relations between the triangular axis began with the outbreak of the Syrian civil war in 2011 and has continued since. The process was gradual: As the rebles took control of more and more territory, the Syrian Army began to empty some of their warehouses and to transfer them to more
secure storage facilities in areas under Hezbollah control in Lebanon. At least at the beginning of the rebellion, the Syrian motive was not to arm Hezbollah. According to American sources, the Syrians only wanted to keep their weapons systems from falling into the hands of the rebels.

The weapons transfers included surface-to-surface missiles of various ranges and possibly surface-to-sea missiles. However, Hezboallah was not known to have received any air-defense systems. The transfers were documented in written contracts in which it was agreed that the weapons were temporarily being deposited.

The Syrians forbade Hezbollah from using the weapons against Israel without their consent and Hezbollah agreed, with Iran’s approval.

Hezbollah also agreed to give the weapons back when Assad’s regime regained its strength and control of the country. And if Assad were to fall, what would be the fate of the weapons? Likely, Hezbollah will keep them for themselves, while continuing to follow Iran’s lead. When the first Gulf War broke out in 1991, Saddam Hussein dispersed his planes to the neighboring enemy Iran, with the promise that they would return them. The planes never again landed on Iraqi soil.

Hezbollah behind the wheel

Israeli is not the only country following the transfer of weapons from Iran to Lebanon with concern. The US, British, Jordanian and Turkish intelligence communities are keeping their eyes open, cooperating and sharing information with each other. All those involved are using all the resources at their disposal to keep track of the transfers and gather information on them: they are enlisting agents (HUMINT) in Iran, Syria and Lebanon, operating listing devices (SIGINT) and using visual methods (VIZINT), with satellite images, spy planes and drones.

According to western sources, weapons deliveries have been flown in recent years from Iran through Turkey to the airport in Damascus, mostly by Iran Air planes. A special unit of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard is respnsible for the flights, however, since the start of the Syrian uprising, Turkey has tightened up
control on this channel, and, at least on one occasion, intercepted a plane based on  intelligence information and confiscated the weapons.

Today, Iran prefers to fly the weapons through Iraq, with which it has friendly relations. The US government has complained to Iraq on several occasions for turning a blind eye to the flights, but to no avail.

According to western sources, when the weapons arrive in Damascus, they are unloaded in a special compound controlled by Hezbollah, usually at night, while Syrian intelligence officerd are present, overseeing the process. They know exactly what each and every cargo load contains.

The cargo loads are then loaded onto a fleet of civilian trucks (sometimes with hidden compartments) which make thier way ti intermediate warehouses in Syria or go straight to warehouses in Lebanon. The drivers are all loyal Hezbollah operatives. In order not to be too conspicuous, the convoys are not
composed of more than a few trucks.

In the past, weapons were delivered from Iran by ships which were unloaded at Latakia port in Syria, and on a few occasions arms transfers were made over land, from Iran through Turkey to Syria. The Turks, acting on intelligence information, intercepted some of the trucks and confiscated the weapons.

Last week, conflicting reports were published about Israel’s policies on the situation in Syria. An Israeli official was quoted by The New York Times as threatening that Israel would intervene in th civil war and take down the Assad regime if he continued tosupply weapons to Hezbollah. Conversly, The Times of London cited a senior Israeli intelligence official as saying that Israel actually prefers that Assad’s rule continue in Syria.

Official spokesmen in Jerusalem, including Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon, reposnded to the reports, saying that Israel is not interested in intervening in Syria, but will continue to prevent the transfer of “game-changing” weapons to Hezbollah, such as precise surface-to-surface missiles, surface-to-sea missiles and air defense systems.

Israel is also concerned with the possibility – which is not likely but must be taken into account – that Syria will also send its chemical weapons to Hezbollah for safekeeping. All of these scenarios are likely to trigger massive military reactions from Israel.

In Israel, people may be shocked by the cruelty of the Syrian civil war and be sorry for its many victims, but the political and military echelon know well that as long as the war continues, Syria will continue to crumble, thousands of Hezbollah fighters will spill their blood in defense of the Assad regime and  Iran will also be bothered by the events; thus, the reality plays into Israel’s hands and its starategic situation will continue to improve. However, no senior Israeli offcial would dare say this publicly, because remarks such as this will display a utilitarian and not moral approach. To believe this is allowed, to say so is forbidden.

With Nothing to Lose: The Limits of a Rational Iran

May 25, 2013

With Nothing to Lose: The Limits of a Rational Iran – Steven David – The American Interest Magazine.

One of the most important foreign policy debates in the United States today is whether it is acceptable to allow Iran to develop nuclear weapons. On one side of this debate stand realists of different types, including former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski and political scientist Kenneth Waltz. This side argues that Iranian nuclear weapons can be deterred because Iranian rulers, while hardly appealing or praiseworthy, are nonetheless rational, cost-calculating actors who know suicidal behavior when they see or contemplate it. In their view, efforts to halt Iranian nuclear development should be modest and should certainly abjure the use of military force, because it would pose a relatively modest threat that can be managed through the time-tested posture of deterrence.

Others disagree. They assert that Iranian leaders could well be religious fanatics who embrace death in the service of their faith and thus cannot be deterred as were the leaders of the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Many skeptics of Iran’s deterrability also cite the fact that several Cold War conditions that conduced to superpower deterrence are not present in the contemporary Middle East. There are potentially many actors rather than just two; there are small numbers of vulnerable nuclear forces likely to be on hair-trigger alert rather than plentiful and secure second-strike forces; communication between leaderships is spotty, with “red phones” few and far between; and a good deal more besides. Nuclear weapons in the hands of irrational Iranian leaders, operating in circumstances far more complex than those prevailing during the Cold War, would thus pose a major threat to Israel, the United States and world stability—the latter not least because of the likely impact on global energy markets.1 Thus, they say, Iran must be stopped from developing nuclear weapons—even if it takes military force to do so.

Exactly where President Obama stands in this debate is something of a mystery. The President’s words have strongly mirrored the logic of the second approach, but his and his Administration’s body language better resemble that of the first. Choosing Chuck Hagel as Secretary of Defense, who is on record as being squarely in the former camp, has done nothing to bring this blurry image into sharper focus.

For the most part, these arguments, especially when reduced to their simplest forms, are mutually exclusive. Either Iranian leaders are crazy, in which case they cannot be allowed to have nuclear weapons, or they are not, making a nuclear-armed Iran tolerable. But what if Iranian leaders are rational yet would contemplate a nuclear strike against Israel or the United States anyway? This is precisely the situation we might expect if the Iranian leadership finds itself on the brink of being toppled from within. Facing the end of their rule, and possibly their lives, Iranian leaders quite possibly could choose to lash out against the United States or Israel in a parting shot for posterity.

To see how a nuclear-armed Iranian regime might behave under duress, we should consider how other leaders, especially those with access to weapons of mass destruction, have acted in the face of threats to their rule. Studying Fidel Castro during the Cuban Missile Crisis, Saddam Hussein after the first Gulf War, and Bashar al-Assad’s current last stand in Syria can open our eyes to the seemingly irrational behavior that can manifest when powerful people who are used to having their way begin to believe their days are numbered. Even Richard Nixon’s last days in office highlight how erratic behavior goes hand in hand with the prospect of a final exit. Clearly, none of this is good news for Iran’s neighbors or for the United States, all of which must contemplate the possibility of nuclear weapons in a country that is far from immune from the waves of protest that have already toppled several regimes in the region. It could well be that Iran’s aborted “green revolution” from 2009–10 will find a second and more powerful wind.

Kenneth Waltz’s long-held view—that most any leader would refrain from the use of nuclear weapons against a nuclear-armed state because it would be suicidal—is called directly into question by Fidel Castro’s actions during the Cuban Missile Crisis. There is little apart from that crisis itself in Castro’s personal history to suggest that he was irrational or even especially extreme in his behavior. He led a disciplined guerrilla army for years, succeeded in overthrowing Cuba’s dictator Fulgencio Batista in January 1959, successfully defied the United States, and went on to become one of the longest-serving leaders of modern times. As Waltz himself has observed, you cannot be totally crazy if you have the wherewithal to seize power and hold onto it in an often hostile environment.

Yet Castro’s actions during the Cuban Missile Crisis illustrate how even shrewd leaders can behave recklessly when faced with the prospect of losing power. As is well known, the United States discovered in October 1962 that the Soviets had placed nuclear missiles in Cuba capable of reaching much of the continental United States. The crisis ended when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev, following an American naval blockade of Cuba, agreed to remove the missiles in exchange for a U.S. pledge not to invade Cuba and a secret agreement to remove American Jupiter missiles from Turkey. What is less well known is that Castro, during those remarkable 13 days, argued for a nuclear strike against the United States—an action that could easily have provoked a global nuclear war and the complete destruction of Cuba.

As the crisis peaked on October 26, with Soviet ships bearing down on the American blockade, Castro sent a letter to Khrushchev imploring him to launch a preemptive nuclear strike against the United States. The letter, which has since been published, argued that an American attack against Cuba was imminent “within the next 24 or 72 hours”, making it imperative that the Soviet Union attack the United States first. A horrified Khrushchev responded by urging patience and by reminding Castro that a nuclear exchange would not only set back the course of socialism but also devastate Cuba. After the crisis, Castro argued that Khrushchev had misunderstood his letter, that he was not asking the Soviet Union to immediately attack the United States with nuclear weapons, but to do so only in the event of an American invasion. For Khrushchev, however, this was a distinction with very little difference. 

For Castro, the survival of his regime was more important than the survival of millions of his people, to say nothing of the populations of the Soviet Union and the United States. Even more alarming, Castro sought a nuclear holocaust even in the event that it could not have saved his regime. Nuclear war would have gained him nothing except the devastation of the United States (and the Soviet Union) for the temerity of bringing him down. What saved the world was not the restraint or rationality of Fidel Castro but the fact that he lacked the ability to start a nuclear war.

In August 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait, and then incorporated the Gulf sheikdom into Iraq as its putative 19th province. Facing economic problems at home, enticed by Kuwaiti oil riches, and reassured by a weak and ambiguous American posture (falsely, as it turned out), Iraqi President Saddam Hussein sought a quick fait accompli that the world would eventually come to accept. In this, as in so many things, he erred grievously.

Saddam underestimated the reaction in the United States and the international community to the specter of a country being erased from world maps by military conquest, a very rare occurrence since the end of World War II. Galvanized by Saddam’s blatant aggression, the United States and its supporting coalition launched air attacks against Iraq in January 1991 and a ground assault in March. As coalition troops poured into Kuwait, routing Iraqi forces, it quickly became clear to Saddam that not only would his conquest of Kuwait not stand; he might be overthrown should coalition troops continue on to Baghdad.

In this precarious situation, Saddam lashed out in an act of environmental vandalism that served no purpose other than to inflict as much harm on as many people as he could possibly achieve with the weapons at hand. Saddam ordered his troops to set Kuwait’s oil wells ablaze. Iraqi forces dutifully set fire to more than 700 wells as they evacuated the country. The fires raged for eight months, creating a cloud of smoke and soot over several million square miles of the Persian Gulf, including Iraq itself. For good measure, Saddam poured 11 million barrels of oil into the Persian Gulf, soiling more than 800 miles of Saudi, Kuwaiti and Iraqi coastline. 

Saddam’s torching of the oil fields matters for several reasons. First, it made no sense. It did not enhance Iraq’s security or economic well-being. It was destruction for destruction’s sake, an act of pure, unalloyed spite.

Second, while American statements before the war could have reasonably been interpreted as a sign that the United States didn’t want to get involved in the defense of Kuwait, there was no ambiguity about what the United States thought about the destruction of the oil fields. In a letter from President George H.W. Bush to Saddam, delivered to the Iraqi government in January 1991, the President made it crystal clear that if Saddam used chemical or biological weapons, or if he destroyed the Kuwaiti oil fields, his regime would suffer dire consequences. This may have deterred Saddam from using chemical or biological weapons (though it is still not clear whether the Iraqi military was capable of launching them under the pressure of combat), but it clearly failed to deter him from setting Kuwaiti oil fields ablaze.

Third, although the environmental effects of the oil destruction proved less cataclysmic than some feared at the time, Saddam did not know this when he gave the order. Some scientists predicted that the torching of the Kuwaiti fields would produce a “nuclear winter” spreading environmental havoc throughout the planet. The possibility of creating such a catastrophe did not give Saddam pause; indeed, malignant narcissist that he was, it may even have encouraged him.

Finally, Saddam’s recklessness during the first Gulf War made American policymakers and military commanders virtually certain that if Saddam had weapons of mass destruction, he would feel no compunctions about using them in the face of deterrent threats. That is one reason the George W. Bush Administration went to war: to prevent Iraq from acquiring such weapons. As it turned out, Saddam’s progress toward acquiring such weapons was much less than had been thought. But the near certainty that Saddam would use whatever weapons he had, regardless of American threats, reflected an accurate recognition that dictators, even with weapons of mass destruction, are virtually undeterrable when they believe their regime is about to be toppled. 

Syria vividly demonstrates the dangers of what can happen when a regime with weapons of mass destruction is threatened. Beginning with peaceful mass protests in March 2011, disturbances in Syria escalated within a year to a full-scale civil war that has already killed more than 70,000 people, according to UN estimates. Syria’s leader, Bashar al-Assad, has been steadily losing control over his country to a range of rebel groups. While the loyalty of his Alawi community (roughly 12 percent of the population) has kept Assad in power so far, we know from credible Russian interlocutors and other sources that he recognizes that the end could come at any time. He has told several associates that, like Muammar Qaddafi in Libya, he expects to be killed along with his family if his regime falls. In this desperate situation, there is growing concern in the United States, Israel and the international community that Syria might use its huge stockpile of chemical weapons in a last-ditch effort to fend off defeat, or even, in the throes of defeat, to spite its enemies by killing as many regime opponents as possible.

Assad’s behavior has reinforced these fears. In November 2012, Israel notified the United States that the Syrians were mixing sarin gas at two sites, filling dozens of bombs suitable for aircraft to carry the deadly substance to its targets. The bombs were then transported to airfields where they could be deployed in less than two hours. The mixing of the materials stopped after President Obama issued public and private warnings to Assad and his military commanders. Nevertheless, the bombs remain at the airfields, ready for use. The Syrian army has large stockpiles of chemical weapons and can resume readying them for deployment and for transfer to organizations like Hizballah or to Alawi redoubts in Latakia province. These weapons could thus be used against Syrian insurgents now or later, or, in Hizballah’s hands, against Israel’s civilian population. 

The U.S. government has attempted to deter Assad, letting him know that his army’s use of chemical weapons would precipitate an American military intervention that would personally target him and his commanders. It is difficult to know, however, if these threats will work, especially at that disorienting moment when Assad believes he is about to die. He has already declared that he will not leave Syria, preferring to fall in his own palace. Many of his Alawi commanders may also conclude that the end of the regime will mean their demise as well. Even if the Syrian leadership does not decide on its own to use these weapons, they could fall into the hands of Islamist insurgents or renegade commanders who would have few compunctions about using them against hated enemies, either within Syria or beyond. Deterrence is a very slender reed against these kinds of passions in exceedingly desperate circumstances. If there is a silver lining to any of this, it is that Syria does not have nuclear or (probably, operational) biological weapons, limiting the level of havoc its leadership or its enemies can inflict.

Lest we suppose that the downfall of dictators is all we have to concern ourselves with, it is worth reviewing the curious case of then-Secretary of Defense James Schlesinger during the last days of the Nixon Administration. In the summer of 1974, it became apparent that Richard Nixon would be forced to resign the presidency as a result of the Watergate scandal. In the days before his resignation, senior Administration officials were reportedly alarmed by Nixon’s increasingly erratic behavior. Discreet inquiries by senior Senators of the Senate Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees revealed that the President had the authority, on his own, to “turn the key in his black box” to launch a nuclear attack. The only way to stop an attack originating in such a manner would be for someone in the chain of command to disobey the President’s order.

With this unsettling thought in mind, Secretary of Defense Schlesinger reportedly reminded the Joint Chiefs of Staff that, per the National Security Act of 1958, any order affecting nuclear weapons must first pass through him before moving down the military chain of command. Schlesinger was saying to the Joint Chiefs, in no uncertain terms, that they had to check with him before carrying out any orders from the President regarding nuclear weapons, especially any orders initiating an attack.

Although the Department of Defense denied these reports, several credible sources have since confirmed them. If true, this episode reveals that even in a stable democracy, the pressures brought to bear on a crippled and fearful leader are enough to cause concerns regarding that leader’s rationality. As it turns out, Nixon retained his senses, at least sufficiently so not to order a nuclear strike. Nevertheless, that those around him feared he might initiate a nuclear war reveals the recognition that desperate leaders who believe they have little to lose need to be watched very closely.

What do these examples say about Iran? In one sense, they carry a reassuring message. In none of the cases we have sketched were weapons of mass destruction actually used, despite the threat of imminent loss of power to the besieged leaders. (Syria is obviously a drama not yet concluded.) Moreover, the toppling of rulers in the so-called Arab Spring has not resulted, so far, in any cross-border warfare, let alone any use of biological or chemical arms. Does that mean that concerns about a teetering Iranian regime precipitating a regional or global Armageddon are overwrought?

Not necessarily. The Middle East, and indeed the world, escaped cataclysm in the cases examined not because besieged leaders behaved rationally or because deterrence worked. Rather, in each of the cases it was the absence of key ingredients that averted catastrophe.

The components of catastrophe are clear: a leadership that believes it has nothing to lose; a leadership that harbors an extreme hatred against some country or group; and, above all, a leadership with the capability to let loose the harm it seeks. For Castro, Saddam and Assad, the key missing component was the capability to inflict horrendous harm. Castro hated the United States and would certainly have launched nuclear weapons if America sought to remove him, but he lacked control over the nuclear weapons in Cuba. Saddam Hussein, who despised his regional foes, as well as America and Israel, wreaked as much damage as he could by torching Kuwaiti oil fields in the first Gulf War and almost certainly would have unleashed weapons of mass destruction in the second Gulf War had he been able to do so. Bashar al-Assad’s fear of the Sunni insurgents and hatred of Israel give him ready targets for his country’s chemical arsenal. His mixing and transport of chemical weapons suggest that he will use them if he is able. We shall see. As for the other deposed leaders of the Arab Spring, they fortunately had no weapons of mass destruction to employ.

The Iranian leadership, on the other hand, is close to meeting all the requirements for unleashing disaster: waning power, manifest hatred, and capability.

The regime’s hold on power is increasingly precarious, so much so that some analysts believe that, rather than wait for an American or Israeli attack on their nuclear facilities, Iran may lash out first. The major demonstrations of the summer of 2009 and beyond confirm that large numbers of Iranians detest the mullahs’ theocratic rule. The not-so-gentle winds of the Arab Spring are blowing across Iran, and its leaders must recognize that the popular demonstrations that have swept through the Middle East may soon return to Tehran as the economy continues to sink.

Clearly, the mullahs have made no secret of their extreme hatred of the United States and especially of Israel. America is routinely denounced as the “Great Satan”, and pro-regime demonstrators routinely call for “death to America.” Their hatred for Israel is even more intense. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who denies the Holocaust, famously called for Israel to be “wiped off the map”, while the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei referred to Israel as a “cancerous tumor” that needs be destroyed. Any non-casual examination of the mullahs’ writings and sermonizing about Israel and Jews reveals unalloyed anti-Semitism of a very familiar, proto-genocidal type.

Should the Iranian regime teeter on the brink of oblivion, all that would stop it from carrying out its murderous threats against Israel and perhaps the United States is a lack of capability. With thousands of centrifuges spinning each day, however, Iran is well on its way to developing nuclear weapons, giving it the ability to do precisely what it has threatened. Assurances that we have little to worry about because Iran’s rational, cost-calculating mullahs will not commit suicide are not persuasive. If the prospect of horrendous retaliation was not enough to deter Fidel Castro or Saddam Hussein, and would likely not work against Bashar al-Assad, why would we expect the hate-filled mullahs of Iran to be any different?

As Iran’s leaders pursue their nuclear quest, therefore, we should indeed be very afraid. We have to hope that the President’s words, not his body language, prevail if peaceful diplomatic means to prevent an Iranian nuclear breakout do not succeed. Even with all its horrendous implications, a military solution is preferable to a nuclear-armed Iran whose leaders are likely one day to find themselves with nothing to lose, and everything to destroy.

America’s grand retreat

May 25, 2013

Israel Hayom | America’s grand retreat.

David M. Weinberg

Last month, I highlighted a new Washington report  headlined by former U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Thomas R. Pickering which argues that America should end its confrontation with Iran over Tehran’s nuclear weapons drive. Pickering and his senior Washington colleagues want U.S. President Barack Obama to altogether drop sanctions and covert action against Iran, since the sanctions are only “contributing to an increase in repression and corruption within Iran,” and alas “may be sowing the seeds of long-term alienation between the Iranian people and the United States.”

Pickering’s call for American capitulation to Iran is now being echoed across the Washington wag world. Numerous think tanks are seeding the American diplomatic and political discourse with similar messages, and paving the way for a climb-down from Obama’s declared policy of preventing (and not merely containing) Iran’s obtainment of a nuclear weapon.

This week, the Center for a New American Security, a think tank closely affiliated with the Obama administration, made it clear which way the Washington winds are blowing. Its new study, “The Challenges of Containing a Nuclear-Armed Iran,” was primarily authored by former Obama administration Deputy Assistant Defense Secretary for the Middle East Professor Colin H. Kahl. He outlines “a comprehensive framework to manage and mitigate the consequences of a nuclear-armed Iran.” In other words, stopping the Iranian nuclear effort is already a passé discussion.

Last month, an Atlantic Council task force (which Chuck Hagel co-chaired until he was appointed defense secretary), similarly released a report that called for Washington to “lessen the chances for war through reinvigorated diplomacy that offers Iran a realistic and face-saving way out of the nuclear standoff.” That’s diplomatic-speak for a containment strategy.

The Carnegie Endowment for International has thrown its hat into the containment camp too, warning that “economic pressure or military force cannot ‘end’ Iran’s nuclear program. … The only sustainable solution for assuring that Iran’s nuclear program remains purely peaceful is a mutually agreeable diplomatic solution.”

To top it all off, the Defense Department-allied Rand Corporation concluded this week that a nuclear-armed Iran would not pose a fundamental threat to the United States and its regional allies. In “Iran After the Bomb: How Would a Nuclear-Armed Tehran Behave? Rand’s experts assert that the acquisition by Tehran of nuclear weapons would above all be intended to deter an attack by hostile powers, presumably including Israel and the United States, rather than for aggressive purposes. “An Iran with nukes will still be a declining power,” they say. “Iran does not have territorial ambitions and does not seek to invade, conquer, or occupy other nations.”

How reassuring.

Similarly, Paul Pillar, a veteran CIA analyst who served as national intelligence officer for the Middle East and South Asia from 2000 to 2005, has published a lengthy essay in The Washington Monthly entitled “We Can Live With a Nuclear Iran: Fears of a Bomb in Tehran’s Hands Are Overhyped, and a War to Prevent It Would Be a Disaster.”

Kenneth Pollack, a former CIA analyst at the Brookings Institution (which is very close to the Obama administration), is about to publish a new book, “Unthinkable: Iran, the Bomb, and American Strategy,” in which he too argues for a containment strategy of Iran’s incipient nuclear weapon.

And finally, the leading realist theorist of the past century, Professor Kenneth N. Waltz of Columbia University’s Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies (who died last week), actually argued in his last published article that Iran should get the bomb! It would create “a more durable balance of military power in the Middle East,” he wrote in the establishment journal Foreign Affairs.

It’s important to understand that Pickering, Pillar, Pollack, Kahl and Waltz faithfully represent the views of large segments of the academic, diplomatic and defense establishments in Washington and New York, who don’t see Iran as an oversized threat to America. They view Iran as a rational actor, and are seeking a “Nixonian moment,” in which Washington would seek strategic accommodation with Tehran, as it did with Beijing.

One of the only front-ranking Washington policy wonks who has argued that Tehran’s nuclear program should be bombed is Professor Steven David of Johns Hopkins University (who is on the academic advisory board of the Israeli Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies). In a powerful essay in this month’s issue of The American Interest, he argues that “any noncasual examination of the mullahs’ writings and sermonizing about Israel and Jews reveals unalloyed anti-Semitism of a very familiar, proto-genocidal type. … Even with all its horrendous implications, a military solution is preferable to a nuclear-armed Iran whose leaders are likely one day to find themselves with nothing to lose, and everything to destroy.” Another is former Pentagon adviser Matthew Kroenig, who has written that a U.S. strike on Iran “is the least bad option.”

For the moment, and at least on record, the administration is sticking by its “dual track approach of rigorous sanctions and serious negotiations.” Hagel (who was once a member of the Iran Project and Atlantic Council task forces) reassured The Washington Institute two weeks ago that “President Obama has made clear that our policy is to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, and he has taken no option off the table to ensure that outcome.”

But the softer signals and acquiescent music coming from Washington are increasingly hard to miss. The grand climb-down from confronting Iran is on its way.

Ready for Any Northern Deployment

May 25, 2013

Ready for Any Northern Deployment.

Fast and accurate: is this what the next war in the northern sector will look like? Ofer Zidon joined a recent training exercise of the IDF Armored Corps’ 401st brigade, and returned with first-hand impressions and photos

In Syria’s shadow, Iraq violence presents new test for U.S.

May 25, 2013

In Syria’s shadow, Iraq violence presents new test for U.S. – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

Saturday, 25 May 2013
Unresolved sectarian tensions, inflamed by the raging civil war in neighboring Syria, have combined to send violence in Iraq to its highest level since Obama withdrew the last U.S. troops in December 2011. (File photo: AFP)
Warren Strobel, Reuters Washington –

Saddled with Middle East problems ranging from Iran to Syria and beyond, President Barack Obama now faces one that is both old and new: Iraq.

Unresolved sectarian tensions, inflamed by the raging civil war in neighboring Syria, have combined to send violence in Iraq to its highest level since Obama withdrew the last U.S. troops in December 2011, U.S. officials and Middle East analysts say.

A Sunni Muslim insurgency against the Shi’ite-led Baghdad government has also been reawakened. The insurgents’ defeat had been a major outcome of then-President George W. Bush’s troop ”surge” in 2007.

The deteriorating situation – largely overshadowed by a Syrian civil war that has killed 80,000 people – has prompted what U.S. officials describe as an intense, mostly behind-the-scenes effort to curb the violence and get Iraqis back to political negotiations.

The United States spent hundreds of billions of dollars and lost nearly 4,500 soldiers during an eight-year war to try to bring a semblance of democracy to strategically placed, energy-rich Iraq.

But Iraqis have failed to agree on a permanent power-sharing agreement, threatening the country’s long-term stability.

Vice President Joe Biden, who has been Obama’s point man on Iraq, called Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani and Osama Nujayfi, the head of Iraq’s parliament, in a round of calls on Thursday and Friday, the White House said.

To Maliki, the vice president “expressed concern about the security situation” and “spoke about the importance of outreach to leaders across the political spectrum,” Biden’s office said in a statement on Friday.

U.S. diplomacy is aimed in part at persuading Maliki, a Shiite, and his security forces not to overreact to provocations. Maliki’s opponents accuse him of advancing a sectarian agenda aimed at marginalizing Iraq’s minorities and cementing Shi’ite rule.

The latest uptick in violence began in late April at a Sunni protest camp in Hawija, near the disputed city of Kirkuk, where a clash between gunmen and Iraqi security forces killed more than 40 people.

A U.S. official said the Obama administration was “very actively engaged” after the Hawija clash in preventing a further escalation, when Iraqi forces surrounded insurgents who had seized control of a nearby town. Washington urged the Iraqi forces not to go in with massive firepower, and the stand-off was settled through a deal with local tribal leaders.

“I don’t want to exaggerate our influence, but this is the kind of stuff we do behind the scenes,” said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “When there is a real crisis, they all run to us. … We’re a neutral party.”

Others say Washington’s influence in Iraq, which began waning even when U.S. troops were still there, has plummeted.

“What is lacking is the lack of confidence of trust among the politicians,” Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told CNN on Tuesday. “And we have lost the service of an honest broker. Before, it used to be the United States.”

‘Zombie insurgency’

Most worrying to U.S. officials and analysts who follow Iraq closely is the rebirth of the Sunni insurgency and of groups such as al-Qaeda in Iraq, thought to be behind lethal suicide bombings aimed at reigniting civil conflict.

“What you’re really looking at here is a kind of zombie insurgency – it’s been brought back to life,” said Michael Knights of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, who has studied Iraq for years and travels there frequently.

By his count, violent incidents have escalated to about1,100 a month from 300 monthly at the end of 2010.

After the Hawija clashes, the U.S. official said, “For the first time really in a few years, we saw people with their faces covered and RPGs (rocket-propelled grenades) and heavy weapons, coming into the streets in a very visible way.”

The official called the increase in suicide bombings by al-Qaeda in Iraq “very concerning,” adding that such sophisticated insurgent groups could “wreak havoc” on political efforts to solve the conflict.

“I wouldn’t call it a strategically significant increase, yet,” the official said of the violence. “We’re in this post-civil war, pre-reconciliation interregnum, gap, period, in which Iraq can tilt either way.”

The setbacks in Iraq have revived criticism from those who opposed Obama’s decision to withdraw all U.S. troops from the country, rather than leave behind a residual force. The White House has said it could not secure political agreement from Iraq’s Sunni, Shiite and Kurds for a law allowing a continued troop presence.

At a Senate hearing last month, Senator John McCain, who opposed the troop withdrawal, asked Assistant Secretary of Defense Derek Chollet how things turned out in Iraq. McCain, an Arizona Republican, cited Obama’s dictum that “the tide of war is receding.”

“I think Iraq is more stable today than many thought several years ago,” Chollet replied.

“Really? You really think that?” McCain pressed. When Chollet said he did, the senator shot back, “Then you’re uninformed.”

The violence, which includes confrontations stemming from the Sunni protest movement, near-daily car bombings and attacks on mosques, is nowhere near the level of Iraq’s 2006-2008 civilwar.

Still, Kenneth Pollack, a former CIA and White House official now at the Brookings Institution’s Saban Center for Middle East Policy said: “I think we’re going to see great sectarian violence. The question is, how bad does it get?”

Syria is ‘an accelerant’

Syria’s increasingly sectarian civil war, pitting mostly Sunni rebels against the government of President Bashar al-Assad, is not the prime cause of Iraq’s troubles, officials and analysts said.

Iraq’s failure to find a stable power-sharing deal among the country’s ethnic and sectarian groups is to blame, they said. Iraq’s Sunnis, ascendant during dictator Saddam Hussein’s rule, feel excluded and threatened, and started staging protests in December.

But Syria’s war “is an accelerant” in Iraq, Pollack said.

“We’re seeing both Shiite and Sunnis going over to fight” in Syria, the U.S. official said. “It’s kind of encouraging this sectarian polarization in a way.”

Iraqis often experience the Syrian conflict via YouTube video clips, he said.

Sunnis see the violence perpetrated by Assad’s government, dominated by members of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, he said. Iraq’s Shiite see often gruesome excesses perpetrated by the rebels.

“They’re seeing two entirely different parallel universes, “the official said.

Iran pushes to expand Mideast war zones

May 25, 2013

Iran pushes to expand Mideast war zones – Alarabiya.net English | Front Page.

Are we going to witness new twists in the regional confrontation with Iran?

I’m afraid so; we are witnessing political and military escalation, such as the news on a surveillance aircraft which was shot down over Bahraini airspace. According to the Syrian opposition, a similar aircraft was shot down in al-Qusayr in Syria.

If that happens to be true, I mean if Iran has the boldness to direct aircrafts to remote airspaces, effectively violating the norms of political engagement, it’s a sign of a dangerous development. This development must be assessed in relation to other developments, such as the sending of Iranian fighters to Syria, activating espionage cells in Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia and sending a ship carrying weapons to Yemen.

Internationally isolated

This shows the hostility of Iran’s policy; it seems that Iran has headed for escalation because either it feels that it is internationally isolated – thanks to its nuclear activities – or because it feels that there is a void it can exploit, due to the absence of Americans. President Barack Obama’s policy might be showing U.S. indifference toward the region’s wars; it shows as well that the United States has lost its appetite for wars and confrontations, especially in the Middle East.

I favor the second reason; Iran is not afraid, but it rather feels that this is its opportunity to extend its influence. Iran might think that it has a rare opportunity now to exploit a situation, owing to Obama’s lack of interest in the region, which has never been the case since WWII.

Iran thinks that Obama does not intend to go for a military option no matter how far these conflicts in the region will lead. Under the leadership of the Revolutionary Guard, Iran wants to make inroads into Syria and Iraq while threatening regional oil-producing countries like Bahrain and others.

We are now facing a growing monster called the Iranian regime that will keep on growing, especially that the Revolutionary Guards are now influencing and impacting more vital sectors in the country such as oil, main establishments, intelligence and foreign affairs.

Abdulrahman al-Rashed

Are these mere speculations resulting from our fear or are they based on ground facts? Gunmen, espionage cells and surveillance aircrafts that are sent to Syria are all signs that Iran is trying to wage new wars and reinforce its influence without taking into consideration international calculations that have always been part of the diplomacy formula in oil-producing countries. Iran’s hostile policy, which is fueled by its nuclear program, has become more pronounced after the failure of threats and economic sanctions imposed by the West. Russia’s support to Iran is now worsening the situation.

We are now facing a growing monster called the Iranian regime that will keep on growing, especially that the Revolutionary Guards are now influencing and impacting more vital sectors in the country such as oil, main establishments, intelligence and foreign affairs. This Iranian monster is pushing the region towards more wars and disputes, which will lead to the expansion of war-zone arenas.

This article was first published in Asharq al-Awsat on May 25, 2013.

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Abdulrahman al-Rashed is the General Manager of Al Arabiya News Channel. A veteran and internationally acclaimed journalist, he is a former editor-in-chief of the London-based leading Arab daily Asharq al-Awsat, where he still regularly writes a political column. He has also served as the editor of Asharq al-Awsat’s sister publication, al-Majalla. Throughout his career, Rashed has interviewed several world leaders, with his articles garnering worldwide recognition, and he has successfully led Al Arabiya to the highly regarded, thriving and influential position it is in today.